Nursing shortage to increase by 1

Its not a closed loop economy, though is it? A lot of the cost are things that have to be paid for in other currency. The more you print/borrow, the lower the value of your currency, so the more you print and borrow.
It is a closed loop in terms of government spending. Every £ govt injects into the economy, except those that are saved (by you and I and everyone else) will return to the Exchequer via taxation. Govt spending creates £s, taxation deletes £s. Sterling (£s) never leaves the Sterling Area.

I agree, some things need to be imported (there's plenty we can do about that if we wanted to) but, as far as the NHS goes I'd guess(?) it's a tiny proportion of what's expended.

The 'print/borrow' narrative is a false representation of how things actually work.

Government doesn't 'print' £s when it spends, it's all digital, via BoE.
The UK government never needs to (and doesn't) borrow its own currency, it creates it as necessary. Only the UK govt (and it's licensed agents) are legally allowed to create it.

The argument 'the more £s exist the less they are worth' is simplistic and reductive. You only have to check historic inflation rates alongside govt deficits in the same period. If that doesn't convince you, have a look at the 'poster child', Japan.
 
It's interesting that biking moans about the NHS having insufficient resources to fulfill the demands on it, but closes his eyes to the fact that increasing demands are fuelled by the aging population

He keeps trying to cast about for somebody else to blame

So that he can avoid admitting our current governments wilful underfunding of public services.
 
He keeps trying to cast about for somebody else to blame
That crops up in a variety of areas but when these areas are looked at the problems are generally insignificant compared with other problems in that particular area.

:) Truss has one thing correct - they all do. The economy needs to grow and in the right way. Pretense of growth is no good at all. The only other way of raising more taxation is changing rates or trying to do something about avoidance. Labour aim to have a close looks at avoidance.

Nurses - currently holding a ballot about taking strike action. A first in rather a long time other than N Ireland.
 
Do you have any suggestions to reduce the numbers of such people?
I expect the chair of the Tory cabal might recommend that they should get a better pension, one with private healthcare, the spongers! I believe MPs get a good pension...
 
The only other way of raising more taxation is changing rates or trying to do something about avoidance. Labour aim to have a close looks at avoidance.

Another way of raising more tax from the people at the bottom, is freezing allowances and tax bands.

The personal allowance was £12,500 in 2019, and £12,570 in 2021. It has not increased since then and it has been announced that it will stay the same

With inflation at around 10%, anybody lucky enough not to have had a real-terms pay cut will have seen a greater proportion of their income going in tax, and some people on quite low earnings or pensions have been dragged into the tax net.

This is a sly way of increasing taxes without mentioning it.
 
The only other way of raising more taxation is changing rates or trying to do something about avoidance. Labour aim to have a close looks at avoidance.
Funny that, tax evasion and offshore accounts and the fact that the EU wanted to look into this is a goodly part of the reasoning why we were persuaded to vote for Brexit, wasn't it?

Nurses - currently holding a ballot about taking strike action. A first in rather a long time other than N Ireland.
Good for them! Often a thankless job and they have been undervalued for a long time
 
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Nurses - currently holding a ballot about taking strike action. A first in rather a long time other than N Ireland.

I find it very distressing that they have been treated with such contempt that such action needs to be contemplated


I notice that @motorbiking did not reply when I asked him about 11% of the workforce leaving in a year.


How can the NHS continue if the government's actions drive essential staff away?

It's almost as if....
 
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